The news that Dianne Murphy is stepping down as Athletic Director brings with it a fantastic opportunity.
This is yet another chance to finally get it right and hire someone who can achieve the goals every serious Columbia fan and most devoted alums have wanted for many decades.
But to hire the right person, we need to be clear about those goals and make sure the administration realizes what its most loyal alumni and donors really want.
Otherwise, the administration will only pursue its own agenda and expediency.. again.
Columbia's new Athletic Director must be someone who can pursue the following goals in this order:
1) Winning and Personal Standards of Excellence
I put these two very important goals together as #1 because nothing else Columbia's new A.D. attempts to achieve will be successful without achieving them first.
Whether it's the key sports of football and men's basketball, or the overall number of Ivy championships won, Columbia is still dead last among its peers in athletic excellence.
Contrary to the misinformation and spin coming out of Low Library, the numbers just do not lie about Murphy's failure to improve these results.
The new A.D. must do whatever is within the rules to achieve championships in football and men's basketball within five years or sooner. I would use the controversial methods used by Tommy Amaker for Harvard basketball as a possible template. That means doing everything necessary to boost the number of high-impact transfers to football, and implementing strategies to gain flexibility under the Academic Index, (A.I.), as much as legally allowed. There are other details of course, but isn't it way past time for Columbia to adopt a "win now" POLICY for football and men's basketball?
Of course it is.
However, the second part of this #1 goal cannot be ignored. Because losing hasn't spared Columbia from too many of the embarrassments and ethical issues that plague the "jock factory" athletic programs at other schools across the country.
Too many members of the CU student body and faculty have either a bad opinion, or worse, NO opinion or awareness of our student athletes.
The no awareness stems from the lack of winning in the key sports and that's already been addressed in this mission statement.
As for the bad opinions, last year's football Twitter scandal and assault charges against Chad Washington, this year's bar brawl, and cheating scandals are examples of how Murphy and her administration also failed to maintain the integrity of our student athletes on and off campus.
Every varsity athlete needs a lot more personal guidance and help to understand the unique role they play in the Columbia community. Until we start winning in the key sports, that role will be diminished, but even now there is so much more they need from the athletic department.
Quick seminars on social media aren't enough. A very extensive orientation program every summer needs to be put in place and staffed by not only salaried employees of the Athletic Department, but also concerned athlete and non-athlete alums who can best discuss how what these students do now will impact the school and the rest of their lives. Opening this kind of mentoring up to the non-athlete alums is essential as this initiative needs to be greatly expanded.
2) Campus and Alumni Engagement
Until the winning in the key sports starts, all the hard work to better market Columbia athletics on campus, to the alums, and to the enormous New York City area market will never really succeed.
One of Murphy's best moves was hiring a marketing director in Barry Neuberger. He has worked tirelessly and creatively in this position. But he has never had a truly winning product to sell. Ice cubes salesmen in Antarctica would probably have an easier time.
Neuberger's dilemma is the perfect example of "cart before the horse" failures of the Murphy regime.
Nothing beats winning and integrity. Nothing.
But once they are established, the efforts to market CU sports to the New York City area and the Columbia neighborhood need to be a focus.
On campus, the athletes need to be more visible in a good way. That starts with helping freshmen move in on the first day to hosting and participating in health events like 5K runs, etc. on campus all year long.
3) Making Sure the Money Talks
Columbia's most successful alums tend to be former athletes. The best and most generous donors tend to be former athletes or avid Columbia sports fans. The last two Chairmen of the Board of Trustees were varsity athletes at CU. Several other current and former trustees are prominent people in the business of sports.
And yet it seems like these special people are often sheepish when it comes to voicing their support and concerns for athletics. Not all of them, but many.
It's way past time to say it clearly: athletics plays an important and positive role in the Columbia experience that should be enhanced, not downgraded.
As for the many alums and donors who aren't ashamed of their high hopes and support for athletics, it's time we get our due. The public documentation, in real time, of just how much athletics outpaces just about every other department and school at CU was made very clear during the last two online "Giving Days" in 2012 and 2013. Only Columbia College outdrew athletics, and it was close for a while.
This means no expenses should be spared for finding the best Athletic Director, coaches, and staff, none. The money is there. Columbia's academic reputation is teflon, There's nothing to be lost by stepping up the spending, not just relative to what Columbia has spent on athletics in the past, but relative to Harvard, Yale and Princeton.
The money is there, and what isn't there now will be made up for in donations in quick time... even quicker if we can get the winning started first.
These are the three pillars of CU athletics that I'd like to see established and upheld by the new A.D. and his or her staff.
Nothing less is acceptable.
Columbia's new Athletic Director must be someone who can pursue the following goals in this order:
1) Winning and Personal Standards of Excellence
I put these two very important goals together as #1 because nothing else Columbia's new A.D. attempts to achieve will be successful without achieving them first.
Whether it's the key sports of football and men's basketball, or the overall number of Ivy championships won, Columbia is still dead last among its peers in athletic excellence.
Contrary to the misinformation and spin coming out of Low Library, the numbers just do not lie about Murphy's failure to improve these results.
The new A.D. must do whatever is within the rules to achieve championships in football and men's basketball within five years or sooner. I would use the controversial methods used by Tommy Amaker for Harvard basketball as a possible template. That means doing everything necessary to boost the number of high-impact transfers to football, and implementing strategies to gain flexibility under the Academic Index, (A.I.), as much as legally allowed. There are other details of course, but isn't it way past time for Columbia to adopt a "win now" POLICY for football and men's basketball?
Of course it is.
However, the second part of this #1 goal cannot be ignored. Because losing hasn't spared Columbia from too many of the embarrassments and ethical issues that plague the "jock factory" athletic programs at other schools across the country.
Too many members of the CU student body and faculty have either a bad opinion, or worse, NO opinion or awareness of our student athletes.
The no awareness stems from the lack of winning in the key sports and that's already been addressed in this mission statement.
As for the bad opinions, last year's football Twitter scandal and assault charges against Chad Washington, this year's bar brawl, and cheating scandals are examples of how Murphy and her administration also failed to maintain the integrity of our student athletes on and off campus.
Every varsity athlete needs a lot more personal guidance and help to understand the unique role they play in the Columbia community. Until we start winning in the key sports, that role will be diminished, but even now there is so much more they need from the athletic department.
Quick seminars on social media aren't enough. A very extensive orientation program every summer needs to be put in place and staffed by not only salaried employees of the Athletic Department, but also concerned athlete and non-athlete alums who can best discuss how what these students do now will impact the school and the rest of their lives. Opening this kind of mentoring up to the non-athlete alums is essential as this initiative needs to be greatly expanded.
2) Campus and Alumni Engagement
Until the winning in the key sports starts, all the hard work to better market Columbia athletics on campus, to the alums, and to the enormous New York City area market will never really succeed.
One of Murphy's best moves was hiring a marketing director in Barry Neuberger. He has worked tirelessly and creatively in this position. But he has never had a truly winning product to sell. Ice cubes salesmen in Antarctica would probably have an easier time.
Neuberger's dilemma is the perfect example of "cart before the horse" failures of the Murphy regime.
Nothing beats winning and integrity. Nothing.
But once they are established, the efforts to market CU sports to the New York City area and the Columbia neighborhood need to be a focus.
On campus, the athletes need to be more visible in a good way. That starts with helping freshmen move in on the first day to hosting and participating in health events like 5K runs, etc. on campus all year long.
3) Making Sure the Money Talks
Columbia's most successful alums tend to be former athletes. The best and most generous donors tend to be former athletes or avid Columbia sports fans. The last two Chairmen of the Board of Trustees were varsity athletes at CU. Several other current and former trustees are prominent people in the business of sports.
And yet it seems like these special people are often sheepish when it comes to voicing their support and concerns for athletics. Not all of them, but many.
It's way past time to say it clearly: athletics plays an important and positive role in the Columbia experience that should be enhanced, not downgraded.
As for the many alums and donors who aren't ashamed of their high hopes and support for athletics, it's time we get our due. The public documentation, in real time, of just how much athletics outpaces just about every other department and school at CU was made very clear during the last two online "Giving Days" in 2012 and 2013. Only Columbia College outdrew athletics, and it was close for a while.
This means no expenses should be spared for finding the best Athletic Director, coaches, and staff, none. The money is there. Columbia's academic reputation is teflon, There's nothing to be lost by stepping up the spending, not just relative to what Columbia has spent on athletics in the past, but relative to Harvard, Yale and Princeton.
The money is there, and what isn't there now will be made up for in donations in quick time... even quicker if we can get the winning started first.
These are the three pillars of CU athletics that I'd like to see established and upheld by the new A.D. and his or her staff.
Nothing less is acceptable.
15 comments:
You should be the new AD, Jake, but a pompous stuffed shirt like Bollinger would never do anything so obviously good for Columbia athletics.
Still, why aren't your points already the template for the Athletic Department? That entire department gets paid to do...what?
Great point about Neuberger too. An excellent marketer/promoter was hired to market and promote
what? Losing?
You should be the new AD, Jake, but a pompous stuffed shirt like Bollinger would never do anything so obviously good for Columbia athletics.
Still, why aren't your points already the template for the Athletic Department? That entire department gets paid to do...what?
Great point about Neuberger too. An excellent marketer/promoter was hired to market and promote
what? Losing?
Will Bollinger sacrifice this opportunity to make a transformational hire on the altar of political correctness? Is there a former Columbia athlete of stature who has succeeded in the professional world a la Royce Flippinger or Gary Walters, who would like to return to alma mater and right this badly listing ship? Somebody with instant street cred?
It was Flippin not Flippinger but your point is well taken.
Needn't be a football alum or any alum, though that would be nice. Anyone with genuine talent and a desire to help Lion football and all other sports. Problem is that's someone Bollinger wouldn't hire.
This is certainly an excellent manifesto by Jake and I agree he should be the next AD. Meanwhile, here are my predictions about who will be the next AD, based on nothing more than many years observation of CU sports and the tendencies of the current admin. Not sure how many points I'll get right but time will tell.
1. It will not be a woman.
2. Very likely a person of color.
3. It will not be a CU alum
4. It will not be a person with a
primary or strong football
background
5. The first choice for the job will
turn it down
I would enjoy knowing others' thoughts. Maybe I'll think of some more points.
Mitch S. 68CC
Tell me the selection committee composition and I will tell you what we can expect. The selection committee must include at least one or two of our former athletic greats. I would like to see Marcellus Wiley head it up. Seriously.
Just an observation... Danny has been silent on several of Jake's latest AD notes... This just reinforces that he is s shill for the Athletic Department and cannot be taken seriously.
Big Dawg has also been silent lately, and he is hardly a shill for the AD. Sometimes you just need to take a few days off.
#1. Danny may have an inside contact, but he is not a shill.
I would hope that you or anyone that reads this blog does not take too many of the posts for gospel, as many are from antagonists with the sole intent to provoke.
Mr. G , if you synthesize your points, you get a male of color who is not a former football coach or player, nor an alum, and is not the first choice for the AD job. Sounds like an assistant AD somewhere who is not clued in to football.. PresBo's perfect candidate.
It doesn't take 10 months to clean out someone's office, re-assign responsibilities. do a national search and find a replacement. Is the 10 month window there perhaps to put some distance between the end of the football season and the expected departure of this staff? A smoke and mirrors attempt to avoid taking responsibility for botching the upkeep of the highest profile sport at the University? Just a guess because a June departure indicates she thinks it matters to play out the next 2 semesters. What is the reason for that?
I nominate former CU Tennis great and coach, Howie Endleman!
He should have gotten the job last time!
Seems to me that the change was not her decision. Otherwise she would be leaving sooner. "Stay until you find something else", would be a option that may have happened.
Therefore she may be gone sooner and not be involved in appointing any new staff.
The ten years could relate to vesting requirements under various pension plans, or to severance benefits.
Greetings, all.
My laptop was down during these recent events; hence my silence.
I'll be mercifully brief here. We at CAEC are in the process of developing a formal response to the announcement. Look for it next week both here and in Spectator. But in the meantime I can say it will resemble what Jake has put together. His was an excellent precis of what we should request and expect.
I hope everyone here has retained the stats I circulated previously. They give the lie to the spurious and cherry-picked info re DM's record. While she was good at funding she failed in her basic assignment: wins.
I also believe she intelligently left town just ahead of the posse.
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